Economic and social profile
‘Pleasantly situated’ on the river Derwent 18 miles north-east of York,
Electoral history
Prior to 1832 Malton was a scot and lot borough ‘under the total control’ of the Whig 2nd Earl Fitzwilliam. Despite its small size – it had just 4,005 residents on the 1821 census – it retained both its seats under the Reform Act, with the boundaries being extended to include the parishes of Old Malton and Norton.
At the 1832 general election one of the incumbents, Henry Gally Knight, retired, but the other member, Charles Christopher Pepys, sought re-election.
The second earl’s death in February 1833 prompted a change in the representation. The new earl, formerly viscount Milton, had been MP for Northamptonshire North, and his son William (the new Lord Milton) took the Chiltern Hundreds in order to offer for that constituency in his place, coming in unopposed.
The defeat of the new attorney-general, Sir John Campbell, at Dudley in February 1834 gave rise to rumours that Pepys would be ‘compelled to make room for him in the Whig nomination borough of Malton’, but these proved unfounded.
Pepys’ elevation to the peerage upon being promoted to the woolsack created a vacancy for which John Walbanke Childers, of Cantley Hall, near Doncaster, was returned unopposed in February 1836. He had sat for Cambridgeshire from 1832, but had failed to secure re-election in 1835. He offered at Malton ‘on Whig principles’,
Ramsden’s death in December 1836 after a prolonged period of ill-health brought another by-election, in January 1837. It was reported that Earl Fitzwilliam had informed voters that ‘they may choose whom they like, provided that the subject of their choice is a Reformer’, but had also suggested that his second son, William Thomas Spencer Wentworth Fitzwilliam, who had become viscount Milton on his elder brother’s untimely death in 1835, was ‘of age, and ready to serve them’.
Childers and Milton both sought re-election at the 1837 general election, where they were unopposed. Milton was absent from the Malton contest, as he had also decided to offer for Northamptonshire North, where the family had sizeable estates.
There were rumours at the 1841 general election that Malton might again serve as a ‘refuge’ for Milton, who was seeking election for the West Riding alongside Lord Morpeth.
Childers took the Chiltern Hundreds in April 1846, allowing Milton – who had failed to secure the West Riding seat in 1841, as had Morpeth – to come in for the vacancy at Malton. Although the weather was ‘extremely unfavourable’, Milton was accompanied to the hustings by bands of music and orange banners bearing inscriptions such as ‘Lord Milton, the friend of the people’, ‘Civil and Religious Liberty’, ‘Agriculture and Commerce’ and ‘No Monopoly’. Unsurprisingly repeal of the corn laws was the dominant issue, and Milton was praised by his proposer for having ‘fought the battle of free trade’ in the West Riding in 1841. Milton himself noted that one of his earliest votes in the Commons had been for corn law repeal. Following his unopposed return he proceeded through the town on horseback, and later addressed voters at a ‘sumptuous dinner’ attended by Morpeth, who had recently been elected for the West Riding. As well as looking forward to the repeal of the corn laws, Milton noted the arrival of the railway in Malton, which he was sure would be beneficial. Morpeth praised Earl Fitzwilliam, who had long opposed the corn laws, as ‘foremost among the happy prophets of the coming good’.
Milton did not offer again in 1847, being returned instead for county Wicklow, where the family had extensive estates. A correspondent to the Yorkshire Gazette wrote that ‘we know nothing as to who will be sent down as our member, to succeed the heir of Wentworth’.
While Denison sought re-election in 1852, Childers retired, and ‘a general meeting of the electors’ was convened ‘to take the necessary steps for obtaining another candidate’.
It was not until well over a year after his return that Charles Fitzwilliam became aware that he was Malton’s MP, as he was hunting bears in the Rocky Mountains when the election took place. His family ‘were unacquainted with his movements; and, at last, they became seriously alarmed’, before word reached England in December 1853 that ‘the missing member [was] found at last’, having arrived at ‘Fort Laramia, in a bear skin, on his return from California’.
Denison, whose family seat lay at Ossington Hall in Nottinghamshire, took the opportunity to come in unopposed for the Northern division of that county at the 1857 general election. James Brown, of Rossington, near Doncaster, offered in his place alongside Charles Fitzwilliam.
There were again rumours of a challenge in 1865, when it was said that Brown would retire to contest the new southern division of the West Riding.
Charles Fitzwilliam subsequently incurred the ‘greatest dissatisfaction’ from some of his supporters after voting with the Adullamites on the Liberal ministry’s 1866 reform bill. It was rumoured that some of Malton’s more advanced Liberals had named an opponent to him in anticipation of a dissolution, and that the Conservatives were also considering running a candidate.
parishes of St. Michael and St. Leonard (New Malton), Old Malton and Norton (increased from 0.1 to 10.7 sq. miles).
£10 householders and ‘ancient rights’ voters (scot and lot).
no corporation; administered by a bailiff appointed by the lord of the manor. Poor Law Union 1837.
Registered electors: 667 in 1832 557 in 1842 539 in 1851 595 in 1861
Estimated voters: no contested elections during this period.
Population: 1832 6802 1851 7661 1861 8072
